Will Galloway
9.3K posts

Will Galloway
@WillGalloway_
Anglican • South Carolinian • Law Student • Air Defender



Not that I’ve played anywhere super crazy yet, but… Overrated: Torrey Pines Underrated: The Farms Perfectly rated: Old Marsh

Wealthy beachfront homeowner Rom Reddy enters GOP gov’s race. 5 things to know thestate.com/news/politics-…






Well there go my plans for Con Law class today


1968: Esquire asks each member of Congress: 1. What idea, work or thinker most influenced your philosophy? 2. What music do you prefer? 3. Who is your favorite painter? 4. Who is your favorite poet/novelist? 5. Name the movie you most enjoyed 6. Theatre, ballet, opera, or sports?

Election season is upon us. South Carolina’s farmers and foresters deserve the best. Their new leader must be one who loves our state, knows our land, and will always do right by our people. One who will help President Trump Make Agriculture Great Again. That leader is fifth-generation Pee Dee farmer Cody Simpson, and I am calling on Cody to step up and answer the call to serve as South Carolina’s next Commissioner of Agriculture. President Trump appointed Cody to lead the South Carolina Farm Service Agency. Before that, he served as my agriculture advisor. Cody Simpson has the experience needed and, just as importantly, has the knowledge and understanding of the challenges our rural families face. Because he has lived them. If he runs, he will do so with my full endorsement and support.


What a night. We had a full house at our rally officially introducing proven businessman and state senator, @MikeForSC to our ticket. South Carolina families are ready for a new age of conservative leadership, and we’re ready to get to work. Join us➡️ WilsonforSC.com



Belgian beer and French cuisine with friends tonight

A common assumption is that throughout history, people have experienced the same basic range of emotions. A radical field of history now challenges this assumption, Gal Beckerman reports. theatln.tc/KD2QRX9Y People tend to imagine that other people “have the exact same set of emotions that we have,” Beckerman writes. “We perform this projection on any number of human experiences: losing a child, falling ill, being bored at work. We assume that emotions in the past are accessible because we assume that at their core, people in the past were just like us, with slight tweaks for their choice of hats and of personal hygiene.” Rob Boddice, a leader in the field of the history of emotions and senses, mistrusts this universalism, a philosophy that emerged during the Enlightenment, when European intellectuals began to assume that all people share a common nature. Many critics now understand that they were attempting to exert power and order over a world that had recently become bigger and stranger. “By the time we get to our current globalized culture, in which a Korean thriller can win Best Picture at the Oscars and Latin pop stars dominate the U.S. charts, the notion that our emotional registers are all essentially alike feels self-evident,” Beckerman continues. “Boddice starts with the opposite premise, that we are not the same,” Beckerman writes. “Rather than being a constant—extending across space and time—human nature for Boddice is a variable and unstable category, one with infinite possible shades.” Although his approach might seem “squishy and postmodern,” Beckerman writes, Boddice’s research layers his own thinking on top of the most recent advances in neuroscience. At the link, read more about the field of study that is pushing historians to reconsider their assumptions about the people of the past. 🎨: Nicolás Ortega

















